Paul Krugman: To End This Depression, What Do We Do Now?
The Preface to Paul Krugman's "End This Depression Now!"
This is a book about the economic slump now afflicting the United
States and many other countries - a slump that has now entered its fifth
year and that shows no signs of ending anytime soon. Needless to say,
many books about the financial crisis of 2008, which marked the
beginning of the slump, have already been published, and many more are
no doubt in the pipeline. But this book is, I believe, different from
most of those other books, because it tries to answer a different
question. For the most part, the mushrooming literature on our economic
disaster asks, "How did this happen?" My question, instead, is "What do
we do now?"
Obviously these are somewhat related questions, but they are by no
means identical. Knowing what causes heart attacks is not at all the
same thing as knowing how to treat them; the same is true of economic
crises. And right now the question of treatment should be what concerns
us most. Every time I read some academic or opinion article discussing
what we should be doing to prevent future financial crises - and I read
many such articles - I get a bit impatient. Yes, it's a worthy question,
but since we have yet to recover from the last crisis, shouldn't
achieving recovery be our first priority?
For we are still very much living in the shadow of the economic
catastrophe that struck both Europe and the United States four years
ago. Gross domestic product, which normally grows a couple of percent a
year, is barely above its precrisis peak even in countries that have
seen a relatively strong recovery, and it is down by double digits in
several Euro- pean nations. Meanwhile, unemployment on both sides of the
Atlantic remains at levels that would have seemed inconceivable before
the crisis.
Sunday, July 1, 2012
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